{"type":"video","version":"1.0","provider":"SproutVideo","provider_name":"SproutVideo","provider_url":"https://sproutvideo.com","title":"Louisiana Grasshoppers in July","html":"\u003ciframe class='sproutvideo-player' src='https://videos.sproutvideo.com/embed/ea9fd5b4131fe8ca63/45c4d9a47ffb833d' width='630' height='354' frameborder='0' allowfullscreen referrerpolicy='no-referrer-when-downgrade' title='Video Player'\u003e\u003c/iframe\u003e","width":630,"height":354,"duration":36.282,"description":"Not a day passes without someone asking me, \"Tim, how do those giant Louisiana grasshoppers mate?\" \n\nWell, here you go: \n\n1) The smaller male grasshopper mounts the female. \n2) The female curls her abdomen up to reach the male's reproductive organ (aedeagus), from which she receives a package of sperm called a spermatophore.  \n3) The exchange takes from 45 minutes up to a full day. \n\nYou're welcome.","thumbnail_url":"https://cdn-thumbnails.sproutvideo.com/ea9fd5b4131fe8ca63/45c4d9a47ffb833d/3/w_1280/poster.jpg?v=1692039510","thumbnail_width":1280,"thumbnail_height":720,"video_id":"ea9fd5b4131fe8ca63"}